Cork Hibernians F.C. Explained

Clubname:Cork Hibernians
Fullname:Cork Hibernians Football Club
Dissolved:1977
Ground:The Mardyke (1957–1962)
Flower Lodge (1962–1976)
Capacity:26,000
League:League of Ireland
Pattern La1:_whiteborder
Pattern B1:_whitecollar
Pattern Ra1:_whiteborder
Pattern So1:_whitestripe
Leftarm1:008000
Body1:008000
Rightarm1:008000
Shorts1:FFFFFF
Socks1:008000

Cork Hibernians F.C. was an Irish football club based in Cork. They played in the League of Ireland between 1957 and 1976 and, from 1962, played their home games at Flower Lodge. In 1971, they were League of Ireland champions. The club was dissolved in 1977 due to financial trouble.

History

The club was originally formed by members of the Ancient Order of Hibernians and had previously played as AOH in the Cork Athletic Union League.[1] Under this name the club won the FAI Intermediate Cup in 1952 and were runners-up in the same competition in 1957. 1957 also saw them change their name, turn semi-professional and join the League of Ireland, replacing Cork Athletic. They played at The Mardyke until 1962, when they moved to Flower Lodge.[2] During the late 1960s and early 1970s Hibs enjoyed a local rivalry with Cork Celtic. Both clubs enjoyed moderate success on the field and support for both teams was very strong. Average gates of 10,000 were not unfamiliar. Indeed, at one game at Flower Lodge against Waterford United, a league decider, an attendance of 26,000 was recorded.

Hibernians enjoyed their most successful era under player-manager Dave Bacuzzi, a former Arsenal and Manchester City defender. Bacuzzi joined the club in May 1970. Initially, he thought he had been approached from a mysterious exotic location when he received a misspelled telegram asking him to contact Cork Island instead of Cork, Ireland. Bacuzzi subsequently guided Hibs to several trophies including the League of Ireland title in 1971, beating Shamrock Rovers in a play-off. In 1972 they won the FAI Cup when Miah Dennehy scored a hat-trick in the final against Waterford United and in 1973 they retained the same trophy. This win earned Cork a place in the 1973–74 European Cup Winners' Cup. In the first round, Hibernians met Czechoslovak outfit Banik Ostrava. In the opening game, away in Ostrava as Cork lost 1–0 on 13 September 1973.[3] On 3 October 1973, Hibs lost 2–1 at Flower Lodge, exiting the competition. Carl Humphries scored the home side's only goal.[4] They also won the all-Ireland competition, the Blaxnit Cup in 1972.

After Bacuzzi left to manage Home Farm in 1974, Hibs remained a top-five club but dramatically folded just before the start of the 1976–77 season.[5] Their crowds had dwindled, and they had lost money fielding ex-England international Rodney Marsh. The club was replaced by another Cork team, Albert Rovers for that season.[6]

In 1985 former player-manager Amby Fogarty attempt to revive the Cork Hibernians name, with the club elected to join the new League of Ireland First Division. However the club was removed from the League of Ireland without playing a game, as the Munster F.A. refused the new team a lease on Turners Cross unless they had their own public liability insurance, which Hibernians could not afford.[7]

Colours

The club wore green shirts, white shorts, and green socks.[8]

Honours

1

2

2

1

3

5

8

1

Team records

Season placings

SeasonPosition
1975–765th
1974–754th
1973–743rd
1972–734th
1971–722nd
1970–711st
1969–703rd
1968–693rd
1967–6810th
1966–679th
1965–664th
1964–654th
1963–646th
1962–636th
1961–625th
1960–619th
1959–606th
1958–5910th
1957–5812th

European record

Overview

CompetitionMatchesWDLGFGA
European Cup
Inter-Cities Fairs Cup
European Cup Winners' Cup
TOTAL

Matches

SeasonCompetitionRoundOpponentHomeAwayAggregate
1970–71Inter-Cities Fairs Cup1R Valencia0–31–31–6
1971–72European Cup1R Borussia Mönchengladbach0–51–21–7
1972–73European Cup Winners' Cup1R Pezoporikos4–12–16–2
2R Schalke 040–00–30–3
1973–74European Cup Winners' Cup1R Baník Ostrava0–11–21–3

Notable former players

See main article: article.

Former managers

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Cork AUL Records. corkaul.files.wordpress.com. 19 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161023053545/https://corkaul.files.wordpress.com/2016/06/cork-aul-records-1947-to-present.pdf. 23 October 2016. dead.
  2. Niall Macsweeney (n.d.), A Record of League of Ireland Football 1921/2-1984/5. Basildon:Association of Football Statisticians.
  3. Web site: Banik Ostrava 1-0 Cork Hibernians . Football Database . 8 October 2019 . en-GB.
  4. Web site: Cork Hibernians 1-2 Banik Ostrava . Football Database . 8 October 2019 . en-GB.
  5. News: Hibs Crash Out Of L.O.I. . Jimmy . Meagan . . 18 August 1976 . 25 May 2019 . Irish Newspaper Archives.
  6. News: Alberts Elected To League . Bill . George . . 18 September 1976 . 25 May 2019 . Irish Newspaper Archives.
  7. News: Cork Hibs forced out . Bill . George . . 3 September 1985 . 22 May 2019 . Irish Newspaper Archives.
  8. Web site: Lenihan . Donal . Memories of afternoons spent following Cork Hibs have lasted a lifetime . Irish Examiner . 29 April 2020 . 11 November 2023.